About the Play

Kailua Onstage Arts continues its inaugural season with the disco-flavored Rolling the R’s by acclaimed playwright, poet, and author, R. Zamora Linmark, based on his novel of the same name.

Set in Kalihi in late ‘70s when teenagers read Teen Beat magazine, hung posters of Shaun Cassidy in their rooms, and boogied to the disco beat. Edgar Ramirez, a Kalihi teenager "who looks like a Filipino John Travolta," is gay and doesn’t care about the taunts from his peers. Edgar and his friends, Katrina and Vicente, along with their classmates, dream, explore their sexuality, and struggle to define their ethnic identities in this surrealistic and gritty story.

The production is directed by Reiko Ho and runs from December 28th through January 20th, at The Arts at Marks Garage, 1159 Nu'uanu Ave, in downtown Honolulu.

On Writing Rolling the R's

For author, poet and playwright R. Zamora Linmark, writing the book (and later the stage adaptation) was a way “to recapture a moment, mixing memory and imagination. It’s my time travel capsule, where the past becomes the present in order to preserve my memories: of this small place called Kalihi, my first home in the United States as an immigrant, and all of the beauty and horror and wackiness of the times.”

Although the book was first published in 1995 and the stage production is currently celebrating its tenth anniversary, “the issues I grappled with,” says Linmark, ”are pretty much issues that have not gone away, sadly: homophobia, bullying, the trauma and rewards that come with assimilation, the struggle to fit in while, at the same time, fighting to be yourself, to retain that part of you that is important, that is different. Not much has changed, really. Yes, people from the margins (via gender and racial and class differences) are more visible now, they have a voice now, but they are still bullied, discriminated against, even killed because of who they are.”

From Page to Stage

Linmark explains that in addition to the continued relevance of the themes, adapting the book for the theater was further facilitated “because an important character in it is language – Pidgin, Taglish (mixture of Tagalog and English)... one could watch the play just by listening to it. So, the play, while it’s preserving a specific time in Hawaii’s local history, is also preserving languages.”

For director Reiko Ho, bringing to life the schoolmates of Rolling the R’s is also a blast from the past: “[They] bring up my childhood, every character is someone I remember from growing up here in the 70’s. The flavor of the writing perfectly captures that time period here in Hawaii.” The cast is too young to have had direct experience with the disco era, but as Ho points out, “The music itself is a character in this story, and the songs and what they evoke have helped serve as an entry point“ for the actors.

KOA on the Road

Kailua Onstage Arts is a new, non-profit performing arts company dedicated to presenting works that give voice to the voiceless. “KOA had a hole in its schedule and Rolling the R’s was submitted for consideration,” explains Artistic Director Kevin Keaveney. “I was immediately struck by how closely our mission statement synced up with the author’s own words about his intent in writing the piece: 'I wrote the play out of the necessity and urgency—to give faces and voices to a marginalized community in Hawaii that, at the time, were invisible or rarely seen on stage.' Although I had already set our first season's slate of shows, I knew that I wanted to present this play early on, to help us state our declaration of purpose."

Although KOA is based in downtown Kailua, we are making the trip over the mountain for this production. “Because this was an addition to our planned season, we had no venue booked, but a happy confluence of schedules and availability meant we were able to accept The Arts at Marks’ gracious offer to host the production. Going forward, we may occasionally perform around the state, but we are still first and foremost a Windward Oahu-based theater.”

About Us

Our Mission

Kailua Onstage Arts is a new, non-profit performing arts company based in downtown Kailua and dedicated to presenting works that give voice to the voiceless – those who have gone mostly unheard because of their race, gender, sexuality, geographic location, or economic condition.

Rolling the R's

Kailua Onstage Arts presents the third show of its inaugural season: the surrealist disco coming of age story Rolling the R's by R. Zamora Linmark

Auditions at KOA

Auditions for Marjorie Prime

Sunday, 1/27 @ 7:30pm and Monday, 1/28 @ 7:00pm

Marjorie Prime by Jordan Harrison

Directed by Kevin Keaveney

2015 Pulitzer Prize Finalist

A Hawaii Premiere

Performance Dates: March 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 31

About the Play

It’s the age of artificial intelligence, and 85-year-old Marjorie examines her past, with the help of a handsome new companion who’s programmed to feed the story of her life back to her — sometimes replacing her realities with idealized memories. Through deeply drawn characters—both real and artificial— author Jordan Harrison burrows into troubling questions of the digital age: What would we remember, and what would we forget, given the power of authorship? Will we be any less human, once computers know us better than ourselves? This richly spare and wondrous play explores the mysteries of human identity and the limits — if any — of what technology can replace.

CAST

2 women, 2 men, any ethnicity.

MARJORIE - 85.

WALTER - early 30s.

TESS - 55. Marjorie's daughter.

JON - 55. Marjorie's son-in-law.

Audition Details

Be prepared to read from script.

Rehearsals begin immediately following casting.

Auditions will be held at Kailua Onstage Arts, 131 Hekili St #203, in Kailua. The space is located directly behind Kono’s (which is on Hekili St, opposite Pali Lanes). There is limited parking in the lot behind Kono’s, but there is parking on Hekili St, as well as in the Whole Foods and Foodland parking lots.

Questions? For further information, or to make arrangements to read the play in advance of the audition, please email kevin@kailuaonstagearts.com

Rehearsals and Performances

Rehearsals will be held at Kailua Onstage Arts, 131 Hekili St. in Kailua, primarily Mon-Thurs, 6-9pm, though this is subject to change as per cast schedule availability.

Performances will be held at 171 Hamakua Dr. in Kailua.

Musical Theater Class for Grades 3 - 5

A 7-week session in movement, voice, and acting for musical theatre with an informal showcase the 7th class, taught by Kelly Wadlegger (Musical Theater Summer School Teacher at Le Jardin Academy and Dance Director at Castle Performing Arts Center/Castle High School

Instructor Kelly Wadlegger

Kelly Wadlegger holds an M.F.A. in Dance (2009) from the University of Hawaii at Manoa (UHM) where she taught dance and choreographed (Rite of Spring) for Ernst Lab Theatre on a three-year graduate fellowship; She has a B.F.A in Dance (1992) from S.U.N.Y. Purchase Conservatory . Kelly currently is the Dance Educator and Dance Director in the Performing Arts Pathways at Castle High School/Castle Performing Arts Center and recently directed musical theatre at Le Jardin Academy summer school.

Kelly is an international choreographer, dancer, and teaching artist who has taught International Baccalaureate Diploma Dance, and choreographed dance concerts and musicals at Western Academy Beijing, P.R. China, and the International School Bangkok, Thailand. She has choreographed commercials; concert dance for CPAC/Castle DanceForce (Sleeping Beauty, Juxtapositions,United Colors of Dance); and staged choreography for Manoa Valley Theatre, Hawaii Pacific University, and Hawaii Mission Houses. She premiered an evening of theatre & dance for Oahu 1st Fringe Festival, and Ong King Arts (Identities in Motion); and has performed locally with Tau Dance Theatre, Halua Pua Ilima, and Convergence Dance Theatre; and has taught/ choreographed at Punahou School, The Movement Center, The Dance Space, UHM Outreach College, Montessori Community School, Still and Moving Center, and Chaminade University.

In New York City she studied Method Acting with Gary Swanson and was a working observer at The Actors Studio where she performed in (MacBeth), and danced with NYC based companies.